French, Malian troops clash with rebels

TIMETABLE:France’s foreign minister said in an interview published yesterday that French troops would begin withdrawing next month ‘if all goes as planned’

AFP, GAO, Mali

A boy leads his donkey cart past a destroyed Malian army armored vehicle on Wednesday in Douentza, a town that was retaken by French and Malian troops last month.

Photo: AFP

French and Malian troops clashed with Islamist rebels near the large town of Gao, Paris said yesterday after reporting that hundreds of insurgents had been killed in a “real war” to reclaim northern Mali.

French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said the extremist rebels, who have been driven from key strongholds that they had controlled in northern Mali for 10 months, struck back at troops with rocket fire on Tuesday.

“There were clashes yesterday around Gao,” Le Drian said on Europe 1 radio. “Once our troops, supported by Malian forces, started patrols around the towns that we have taken, they met residual jihadist groups who are still fighting.

“We will go after them. We are securing the towns we have been able to take along with the Malian forces. The jihadists around Gao were using rockets yesterday,” he said.

The confirmation of clashes comes after one of the militant groups, the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO), said it had attacked military positions in Gao, the largest city in the north.

On Tuesday, Le Drian said “several hundred” al-Qaeda-linked militants had been killed by French air strikes as well as “direct combat in the key central and northern towns of Konna and Gao.”

“This is a real war with significant losses but I’m not going to get into an accounting exercise,” he said yesterday when asked about the toll.

France’s sole fatality so far has been a helicopter pilot killed at the start of its operation 27 days ago.

Mali said 11 of its troops were killed and 60 wounded after the battle at Konna last month, but has not since released a new death toll.

The Malian army took “some prisoners, not many, who will have to answer to Malian courts and to international justice,” Le Drian said, adding that some of those detained were high-ranking militants.

Almost 4,000 French troops have been deployed in Mali since the former colonial power swept to the country’s aid on Jan. 11 as a triad of Islamist groups pushed south toward the capital. This number will not be increased.

The force matches the size of the French deployment in Afghanistan at its height in 2010.

While French President Francois Hollande has said his troops will remain in Mali for as long as they are needed, Paris is keen to step back and let some 8,000 African troops take the reigns.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told daily newspaper Metro in an interview published yesterday that soldiers would begin withdrawing “in March, if all goes as planned.”

“France has no intention of remaining in Mali for the long-term. It is up to the Africans and to the Malians themselves to guarantee the country’s security, territorial integrity and sovereignty,” he said.

While asserting that the “narco-terrorists have been stopped,” Fabius said “the risk is always present.”

The Islamists have put up little resistance, many of them fleeing to the Adrar des Ifoghas massif around Kidal, a craggy mountain landscape honeycombed with caves where they are believed to be holding seven French hostages.

Kidal, the last key bastion of the Islamists, is now under control of French forces and about 1,800 Chadian troops, but fighter jets continue to pound the region around the remote desert outpost.

Meanwhile a Tuareg separatist rebel group who kickstarted Mali’s descent into chaos with a rebellion for independence last year, said it is working with France against “terrorists” in the region.